Scary, scary shit
July 21st, 2005
I’m sitting outside on the deck at the lakehouse in the middle of a storm with no rain. The thunder is outrageous and I keep seeing lightning out on the lake. It’s awesome. But where’s the rain? I need to know. I’m freaking out that even one raindrop will get on my lovely tank of a computer. I’m very nervous right now. After each of these words I type, I glance up, as if I might have missed the first drop. It’s really annoying that I’m doing that.
(One hour passes.)
Okay, the downpour is over. I got inside fine, before any water hit the deck. I chickened out after envisioning the destroyed Mac floating in a pool of what just killed it. Why did I need to take it that far? I even started imagining different and more awful scenarios. One involved me running inside on a sunny day to do something, probably get a large snack, and leaving the Mac outside during a sudden downpour. In this vision, I didn’t even think “I have to run out there and save my computer.” I just went about the snack and let it sit there, forgetting. Hours later, when I remembered what I had been doing hours ago (because that’s what I do) I went outside, realized what had happened, and began to weep. In my mind I pressed the pause button and watched myself bawl in slow motion. I recall there being snot involved, which would make sense because right now I have a cold. Then I called Apple in tears and Apple laughed and called me a moron, which made me cry even harder and since I coulldn’t see, I ran smack into a table, hit my head, and never woke up. Keep in mind none of this actually happened. This was me sitting safely indoors with the Mac, willingly plunging into a nightmare.
I do this a lot — get a freakish pleasure out of imagining really sad scenarios. I remember trying to convince my dad of something once during Annie Barrett: The Teenage Years and him looking at me with this “you’re crazier than I thought” look. I told him I’d want to throw my childhood doll, Carwie, off a speeding boat. If anyone knew me back then, you know that despite my “teen” status, I was still obsessed with this doll to the point where we all considered her a member of the family. (Her birthday is October 2nd and she is always just turning two. I still believe this.) It actually became quite comical within the family. I don’t think anyone else would get it so don’t even go there. Anyway, I adored her. So there’s no reason I should have wanted to throw her off a moving boat.
I tried, and failed, to explain the thrill I sought. I wanted to fling her in wildly into the air, and then sort of stop time (pause button!) so that she’d never hit the water. I just wanted the momentary feeling of doing something that treacherous and reckless, but I didn’t want to have to deal with the trauma of the aftermath. (Friends tell me this is also a common attitude towards sex.) I tried to explain that it could be like a still frame in a movie, when something in motion stops suddenly right before the credits roll. I’d be standing at the edge of the boat, post-fling, mouth wide open and screaming, the doll on the upwards portion of her arc, still smiling. That’s it. It would have to stop there.
This sort of reminds me of the scene in Love Actually in which Colin Firth loses his manuscript. The Portuguese indentured servant accidentally picked up the coffee mug that was holding the typed pages down, and they all blew away into a pond. I want to do that! For some reason I’d find it thrilling to have a stack of my own meaningful, irreplacable typed pages fly away and be gone forever. Or if not, I’d at least like feeling like I had the power to make it happen. I’d sit there, nudging the paperweight, toying with the idea until it completely freaked me out and I couldn’t take it anymore; then I’d probably chicken out and run inside… just like I did with the computer. This post is getting so meta.
Come to think of it, the losing-the-writing thing is pretty common. It happened in Anne of Green Gables with the handsome father figure Morgan’s work, and I’m pretty sure it happened in a Parker Posey movie. I forget the movie. It’s a male writer on the top level of some sort of fancy boat (meta!) and he throws away the novel he’s just completed on a whim, because he knows it’s a piece of shit. How writerly of him. No wonder I can relate. What damn movie is this? Why am I thinking Celebrity? Was Parker Posey even in that? That has to be wrong. I’d google all of this, but no wireless out here and it’s more fun to torture myself like this. Even though going inside would be a terrific idea now that a Shania Twain song just came on, about 40 notches higher in volume than all of the other songs. Two good reasons to visit the stereo. WTF? The neighbors hate me.
Anyway, now I’m back outside, and I’m even charging my computer. That was an effort. I knew there was an outlet somewhere along the side of the house but couldn’t find it for the longest time because Bill managed to cover it with something the exact same color as the faded gray wood. Bill the Builder never fails to impress.
Everything’s still wet, so I laid towels from the outlet to here so that the cord wouldn’t be resting on water. Was that necessary? I don’t really understand how electrocution works. I’m aware that using a hairdryer in the rain would kill me, but what if water just started pouring while I was using a plugged-in computer? I highly doubt I’d die from that.
And yes, if you were wondering, I am sitting here envisioning myself just on the precipice of turning on a hairdryer in the middle of a storm. I’d just have my finger on the button! I wouldn’t actually do it! Nothing would happen!
Okay, this is becoming scary. Suddenly I’m recalling a moment during my drive here that I found a tad worrisome but nothing major. During the Cars song “Hello Again,” there’s the line “You just want to fly!” at the end of a verse. It’s the kind of line that gets you really revved up for the next few seconds, a line you’d sing even if you didn’t know the rest of them, because it sounds more passionate than the rest of the lines.
But instead of “fly,” I sang “You just want to die!” I was certain that was correct. Strangely, I’d made the same mistake many other times in the past. I guess I just never fixed the glitch. Or maybe this is my way of telling myself that I want to die. But probably not. Pretty sure there would beĀ warning signs other than mistaken Cars lyrics.
Maybe being all alone in a big house (family’s coming up tomorrow) is making me crazy. I live alone in New York, but it’s different being alone here, in a place where a step in any given direction doesn’t require the artful dodging of mountains of crap. This place has (gasp) multiple rooms. I feel like I should spend an hour in each one, just to appreciate the space. Yeah, let’s try it.

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